Thanks for calling me "people", I'll put it on my CV.Why do people only talk about the last 6 months of RDZ when we had massive injuries, fatigue from playing in Europe and a stroppy manager, and ignore the amazing season and a half before that? The excitement of Europe for the first time?
I’m on the same page as Jetset Jimbo. The football under Fab is dull, it really isn’t that much fun to watch.
I’ll qualify that by saying that obviously Fab is a young manager and we have young players and so all of this may change with familiarity and experience but my fear is just that it’s his style of football.
Also results have been ok in the main, good and bad and we have a decent points total and place in the league. Sometimes it’s not just about the point on the board though, we all want to watch exciting football in the end.
The last six months looked a lot like the previous six months, with the difference that people were happy because we were winning against an Ajax close to the relegation zone in Eredivisie, a French team that finished mid-table in Ligue 1 and AEK Athens that has a third or so of our wage budget. These wins along with a handful of other great victories (Spurs and Palace most frequently mentioned) disguised a frequently unwatchable brand of football that resulted in 33 points from our final 32 PL games.
The fatigue thing is a load of tosh. We had a massive squad compared to most teams and rotated frequently. In no other season in frequent memory has fewer players made 3k+ minutes on the pitch. Certainly not in our best ones.
24/25:
Players over 4k minutes: 1
Players between 3k-4k minutes: 2
Players between 2k-8k minutes: 8
23/24
Players over 4k minutes: 0
Players between 3k-4k minutes: 5
Players between 2k-3k minutes: 5
2022/23
Players over 4k minutes: 0
Players between 3k-4k minutes: 6
Players between 2k-3k mintes: 5
2021/22
Players over 4k minutes: 0
Players between 3k-4k minutes: 3
Players between 2k-3k minutes: 7
As for injuries, yes we had them and they had an impact. But we went into last season after what most people saw as a fantastic transfer window - in the thread "Rate the window out of 10", one North Stand Chat-user called @Guinness Boy even gave it a 10 out of 10:
10. Caicedo and Mac always going. Maxed the value of both, both replaced positionally. Added a lot of youth but some nice experience with Milner.
Still saying that I think tomorrow will be very difficult but once Fati and Baleba are bedded in we have at least the equivalent of last season positionally and have swapped individual brilliance for more cover in depth.
With a chunky nice squad of 26 established footballers - five more than Man City and 3-4 more than most other teams (apart from two or three teams collecting players for fun), we were ready for injuries.
Of course, getting players injured will have some sort of impact. But when we have 26 players and 8-10 players are injured, we still have 16 handsomely paid lads and its the job of the handsomely paid head coach.
Blaming injuries is like blaming referees: its for weaklings. If you go and lose 7-0 to Nottingham, 4-0 against Luton, 6-1 against Villa or 3-0 against Burnley, spare me the bullshit about the eight lads missing - lets focus on what the other 16 professional Premier League players did wrong and how to not make it happen again.
Moaning about injuries is defeatist self-victimisation most frequently expressed by Arsenal or Manchester United fans picking their teams as compensation for a lack of self-confidence. "We're useless and these external uncontrollable things must be the reason!"... bah. Humbug.
People really need to man or possibly woman up when it comes to these things. The reason why you don't win games is never "the ref made a bad call" or "this guy was injured", it is always "we could have done better". Anyone blaming the ref, the weather, The Terrace or injuries isn't being honest to himself. That goes for Potter, De Zerbi, Hurzeler, fans, media.